Pandora II
Ideal_Rock
- Joined
- Aug 3, 2006
- Messages
- 9,613
On the back of the giving your teen **** thread, I'm interested to see people's views on when sex ed should begin. Also should it be the job of the parents, or the school? What should/shouldn't be included?
I started lessons in sex ed at age 8. The initial ones were on puberty and boys and girls had lessons separately - the girls also had the lady from Tampax come to do a talk and hand out free samples!
We then had from age 12 what was known as 'Personal & Social Development' which was co-ed. We covered all forms of contraception (including demonstrations of how to put on a condom!), emotional & respect aspects of sexual relationships, homosexuality, drugs, alcohol etc. In the first year - age 12-13 - we also all covered human reproduction in Biology.
By 14 we pretty much all knew how babies were made and how not to make one.
I think my schools were very open minded (given that this was 1985-1990) and I don't know of any parents that withdrew their kids. Since then, in my role as a politician I have worked extensively on campaigns to reduce teen pregnancies and the range of sex-ed offered by some schools (in general very religious schools) is next to nothing. One Catholic school refused to allow contraception to be taught at all - until we showed them the statistics showing that their school had the highest rate of pregnancies in the area!
I started lessons in sex ed at age 8. The initial ones were on puberty and boys and girls had lessons separately - the girls also had the lady from Tampax come to do a talk and hand out free samples!
We then had from age 12 what was known as 'Personal & Social Development' which was co-ed. We covered all forms of contraception (including demonstrations of how to put on a condom!), emotional & respect aspects of sexual relationships, homosexuality, drugs, alcohol etc. In the first year - age 12-13 - we also all covered human reproduction in Biology.
By 14 we pretty much all knew how babies were made and how not to make one.
I think my schools were very open minded (given that this was 1985-1990) and I don't know of any parents that withdrew their kids. Since then, in my role as a politician I have worked extensively on campaigns to reduce teen pregnancies and the range of sex-ed offered by some schools (in general very religious schools) is next to nothing. One Catholic school refused to allow contraception to be taught at all - until we showed them the statistics showing that their school had the highest rate of pregnancies in the area!